
Moline Insulation provides insulation services throughout Moline, IL, including attic insulation, spray foam, and crawl space work. Locally owned since 2020, we know Quad Cities homes and respond to most requests within 1 business day.

Moline homes built before 1960 often have walls with little or no insulation and attics where the original material has settled or degraded. A whole-home insulation assessment finds where your house is losing the most energy and builds a plan to fix it. If you have been putting off this kind of upgrade, our home insulation service is a practical starting point.
Moline winters push frost depth to 30 or more inches, and a poorly insulated attic is the fastest route for heat to escape your home. Ice dams on older Moline roofs are almost always a sign the attic does not have enough insulation. Adding depth to the attic floor is one of the most cost-effective improvements you can make in this climate.
Living near the Mississippi River means crawl spaces in Moline deal with elevated humidity from spring through fall. Uninsulated crawl spaces let that moisture into your floor system and let cold air reach your pipes in winter. Insulating and sealing the crawl space walls protects both your comfort and your home's structure.
Moline's climate zone, where temperatures can swing more than 100 degrees between seasons, puts enormous stress on any gaps in your home's thermal envelope. Spray foam seals those gaps and insulates at the same time, making it especially effective in the rim joist area and crawl space walls where older Moline homes are most exposed.
Moline's Craftsman bungalows and Foursquare two-stories often have attics with irregular joist spacing and obstructions that make batt insulation hard to install evenly. Blown-in material fills around every obstruction and reaches every corner, making it a practical choice for the attic floors common in older Moline construction.
Older Moline homes were built before modern air sealing standards existed, and decades of settling have opened up gaps around plumbing penetrations, attic hatches, and recessed lights. Air sealing before adding insulation locks in the improvement and prevents conditioned air from escaping into the attic during Moline's coldest months.
Moline sits in a climate zone where winter temperatures regularly drop below 0°F and summer heat climbs past 90°F with high humidity. That 100-plus degree seasonal swing is unusually demanding on a home's thermal envelope, and it makes adequate insulation more important here than in milder climates. At the same time, a large share of Moline's housing stock dates to before 1960, when insulation standards were far lower than today. That combination, old construction in an extreme climate, is exactly why insulation upgrades pay off so clearly in this city.
The city's proximity to the Mississippi River adds a moisture dimension that most inland Illinois towns do not face. Elevated spring humidity works its way into crawl spaces and rim joists, and clay-heavy soil holds water against foundations long after rain events pass. Homes on the lower streets near the riverfront are most exposed, but properties throughout the city can be affected. Illinois also follows a statewide energy code that sets minimum insulation levels for permitted renovation work, so any project that triggers a permit needs to meet those thresholds. A contractor who knows the local permit process and the specific conditions in Moline's neighborhoods can address all of this as a single job rather than as separate problems.
Our crew works throughout Moline regularly, and we understand the local conditions that affect insulation work here. We are familiar with the City of Moline Building and Development Services permit process, and we pull permits on behalf of customers whenever the scope of work requires it. Moline homes vary considerably depending on where they sit in the city: the larger brick homes on the South Hill have different insulation needs than the wood-frame bungalows closer to downtown, and we approach each property based on what we actually find on-site.
The streets around the John Deere Pavilion and the riverfront neighborhoods along Riverside Drive include some of Moline's oldest housing. These homes are well-built but often have original plaster walls, no wall insulation, and attic material that has compressed significantly over the decades. We also work regularly in the neighborhoods near Vibrant Arena and across the south side of the city, where ranch homes from the 1950s and 1960s present a different set of insulation challenges. No matter which part of Moline your home is in, we know the construction era and the common gaps we will find.
Moline is part of the Quad Cities, and we serve the whole region. Homeowners in Rock Island deal with the same river-corridor humidity and pre-1960 housing stock that Moline homeowners face. Our team understands the conditions across the region, and we bring that same local knowledge to every job.
Call us or send a message through our contact form. We respond to most Moline requests within 1 business day to schedule a convenient time for a free on-site estimate.
We inspect the attic, crawl space, and any other areas you are concerned about. The estimate covers scope, materials, and total cost with no obligation, so you can compare before you decide.
Most Moline insulation jobs take one to two days. We handle permit applications when required, keep the work area clean, and let you know what to expect for re-entry if spray foam is used.
Before we leave, we walk you through the completed work so you can see exactly what was done. If any questions come up after the job, we are easy to reach and stand behind our work.
No pressure, no obligation. We assess your Moline home, explain exactly what we find, and give you a written estimate before any work begins. Most requests receive a response within 1 business day.
(309) 581-0445Moline is a city of roughly 41,000 to 43,000 people on the Illinois bank of the Mississippi River, part of the Quad Cities metro area alongside Rock Island and the Iowa cities of Davenport and Bettendorf. Moline is best known as the global headquarters of John Deere, one of the largest equipment manufacturers in the world, which has operated here since the 1840s. The company's long presence has shaped the city's economy and kept a stable base of working and middle-class homeowners in the area for generations.
The city's residential neighborhoods reflect that long history. The South Hill and Overlook areas on the bluff above the river are home to larger, older properties, including brick Craftsman bungalows and American Foursquare two-stories built in the early 1900s. The neighborhoods closer to downtown, near the John Deere Pavilion and the Riverside Drive riverfront, include older wood-frame homes on narrow city lots. The south and west sides of the city have more ranch homes from the 1950s and 1960s. Across most of the city, the median year homes were built is around 1955, which means the majority of Moline homeowners are living in houses that predate modern insulation standards by decades.
High-density foam that also acts as a moisture and vapor barrier.
Learn MoreFlexible, lightweight foam ideal for interior walls and soundproofing.
Learn MoreEnergy-efficient insulation solutions for commercial buildings of any size.
Learn MoreControls moisture migration through walls, floors, and ceilings.
Learn MoreMoline winters are hard on under-insulated homes. Call us today or send a message and we will get back to you within 1 business day.